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Serious stuff happening in Spain right now

Where the Spanish (Madrid) government is trying to suppress Catalonian independence and prevent them having an independence referendum.

They've tried to send 4,000 military police to the region to take control, but the Catalans have prevented them from being able to dock in their ports. This is a genuine independence struggle (which I support - why wouldn't any of us who believe in freedom not support that?), that is threatening to turn very nasty. 80 years ago (or so) Spain descended into civil war, followed by years of a repressive Franco dictatorship.

And meanwhile the 'radical right' AfD party surges to third place in the German elections. Things continue to stir up in Europe as the EU dream starts to fall apart at the seams.

when you got multi-millionaires like Blair, Mandelson, Clegg calling anyone who voted Out an idiot, while Brits struggle to find jobs in the building trade and even here in Devon factories are virtually all Polish. It's not surprising many of us want out too

I must away now, I can no longer tarry
This morning's tempest I have to cross
I must be guided without a stumble
Into the arms I love the most

You sound a bit like a daily mail headline there Hubs..... The German policy on immigration was always going to invoke a little fascist kick back.....It will be business as usual in Europe.

Haha, I get your point. But...... I stand by what I said. L Pen was only defeated by parachuting in puppy-kissing pin-up Macron to mop up the waverers and turn things away from a decisive anti-EU vote in France. Yes, in Germany there is a big swing against their immigration policy, but I also think it's a sign that the EU project is losing its gloss, even for the Germans, who have benefitted more from it than anyone else. In Spain, Italy, Portugal and Greece there are already well-documented anti-EU movements, mainly because people perceive they have been shafted by the EU and their economies stalled by being forced into the Euro straitjacket. Greece is being bled dry by the EU, a punitive process that does not exactly instil one with feeling for the 'community' aspect of the European community.

Wider seismic economic shocks continue to shake the EU's foundations, as the euro and the European banking system teeters on the edge of collapse. Merkel and the ECB have just about managed to hold it all together with the dark arts of quantitative easing and huge immigration programmes to boost the economy, but countries like Italy have had to be bailed out so many times it's a joke. This kind of economics is all short-term bandaid - it is not sustainable.

The Vice President of the European Parliament has described yesterday's events in Catalonia as a "coup against Europe". If anyone thinks the EU is on the side of the people they really need to let that sink in.

What is happening in Catalonia - the Spanish government attempting through military force to prevent the Independence vote from taking place - is nothing short of fascist. And this is the response from the EU. The same EU whose own treaty, in article 7, promises "suspension of any member state that uses military force against its own population."